LITERARY GEOGRAPHY
cod. 1008146

Academic year 2024/25
3° year of course - Second semester
Professor
Davide PAPOTTI
Academic discipline
Geografia (M-GGR/01)
Field
Attività formative affini o integrative
Type of training activity
Related/supplementary
30 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in ITALIAN

Integrated course unit module: LITERARY THEORIES AND GEOGRAPHIES

Learning objectives

Expected learning outcomes: critical knowledge of the main disciplinary notions and aspects.
Knowledge and comprehension: oriented towards a critical analysis of the information discussed in class; contextualization of the discussed topics within the interdisciplinary field of social sciences and understanding of the interdisciplinary crossings.
Ability to apply knowledge and comprehension: authonomous and critical use of the research instruments and of the geographical-historical notions discussed in class and explained in the texts.
Authonomy in judgment: this is the overall main objective of the course, with a particular reference to the acquisition of a critical consciousness of the spatial and territorial aspects portrayed in literature.
Communicative abilities: acquisition of a critical, though not necessarily technical, language, which allows to distinguish and discuss the characteristics of a phenomenon beyond the simplifications and the generalizations produced by mediascapes.
Learning capacity: proportional to individual abilities.

Prerequisites

None

Course unit content

Geography of literature: theoretical approaches and case studies. The encounter between geography and literature represents a promising interdisciplinary field that investigates, with varied and complementary conceptual tools and research methodologies, the relationships between literary texts and geographical imaginaries. During the course, we will go over some theoretical aspects of the relationship between these two disciplines, and later we will analyze some case studies related to the image of urban environments and islands in literature. A specific focus will concentrate on urban literary landscapes and on the relationships between landscape and literary texts in Portuguese culture.

Full programme

- - -

Bibliography

It is important to remember that
- it is compulsory to prepare the exam on the programme of the academic year in which one is enrolled in the third year. No changes of programme are allowed
- the exam must be prepared by fully reading the textbooks indicated here below, and not summaries prepared by others.

1) Patrizia De Ponti, Geografia e letteratuta. Letture complementari del territorio e della vita sociale, Milan, Unicopli, 2007
2) Nicoletta Brazzelli, Anna Maria Salvadè, editors, Città e spazi urbani tra geografia e letteratura, Milan, Mimesis, 2023
3) Roberto Francavilla, Quel che il mare non vuole. Paesaggio e letteratura in Portogallo, Milan, Mimesis, 2023

Teaching methods

Lectures will present the general interpretative critical coordinates of the encounter between geography and literature, through both quantitative and qualitative data and approaches.
Class discussion will be stimulated by the proposition of questions aimed at sharing personal opinions and knowledge related to specific topics. This will allow to develop critical attitudes and the authonomy of judgement.
Besides lectures, there will be seminar-oriented sessions, with the help and contribution, also in preparing and leading these meetings, of the students.
Guest lecturers could present lectures through the course.
In the presentation of both quantitative and qualitative data, the teacher will use Power Point presentations, movie and documentary screenings, visits to specialized web sites, and examples of computer cartography.

Assessment methods and criteria

The final exam will be an oral one. During the exam the teacher will test:
- the ability to illustrate in a clear way, with a proper language, the main critical and contextual notions discussed in class and explained in the written texts; a specific importance will be given to logical and communicative abilities
- the knowledge of the geo-historical contexts of the phenomena that were analysed and discussed in class The pass/fail divide is defined by the presence of both these parameters:
a. demonstration of having carefully read the textbooks
b. development of a critical research itinerary on the discussed topics, with the related ability in creating and proposing personal contributions and critiques
The exam will also involve the writing of a short paper, following the directions provided at the entry ""Other information" on this web page

Other information

To complete the exam, the student has to prepare a short paper (8,000 to 12,000 characters spaces included) related to a literary work. The paper will approach a geographical reading of the chosen text in regards to the geographical element analyzed in one of the texts for the exam: the city. The short paper cannot investigate a literary work that is already analyzed in the texts of the program. The reading of the text can follow any of the potential geographical interests, such as the inspiration linked to specific places, the depiction of landscapes, the role of the artistic representations in territorial images, the
typologies of human landscapes, the relationship between the inhabitants and the territory, etc.. The paper has to be written following the usual rules of academic writing: endnotes (or footnotes), reference bibliography (only the titles that are used in the preparation of the text), quotes in brackets when directly taken from other sources, clear indication of every source used in the preparation of the text. Every use of texts by other authors taken from printed or online sources and not adequately quoted will be considered plagiarism, and will involve a lower grade. The paper will have to be sent by email to the teacher (davide.papotti@unipr.it) at leats ten days before the date scheduled for the exam. The paper must include at the beginning the name of the student, the name of the course, the academic year, and the student number.

2030 agenda goals for sustainable development

11, 15, 16